Week 3 Flashcards

1
Q

what are factors that may compromise the airway?

A
  • tongue
  • position of patient
  • loose teeth or foreign objects, vomit
  • infection of upper airway eg. epiglottitis, croup
  • upper airway obstruction - laryngeal spasm, tumour, oedema
  • Trauma - facial and oral bleeding soft tissue injury to neck or face fractures.
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2
Q

WHat muscles, if used at rest, indicate respiratory distress?

A

Sternocleidomastoid and intercostals

Tracheal tugging and tracheal deviation

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3
Q

what are some causes of course crackles?

A

due to consolidation

  • chest infection
  • gunk in lungs etc

Heard in both insp and exp, may be modified by coughing

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4
Q

What are some causes of fine crackles?

A

Alveoli popping open
- APO

acute - pnemonia
chronic - pulmonary fibrosis
fluid - pulmonary odema

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5
Q

What do wheezes signify?

A

opposing airway walls implying significant airway narrowing

Generally expiratory but can be on Insp when worsening

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6
Q

DO airways dilate or narrow on expiration?

A

Narrow

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7
Q

What does stridor indicate?

A

Inspiratory muslce wheeze heard loudest over trachea

Suggest obstructed trachea or larynx eg. Croup, anaphylaxis, obstruction

Sever resp distress category

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8
Q

What are some causes of stridor?

A

Obstruction within the lumen of airway

  • Foreign body
  • tumour
  • bilateral vocal cord palsy

Obstruction within wall of airway

  • oedeme from anaphylaxis
  • tumour
  • laryngospasm
  • croup
  • acute epiglotitis
  • Amyloidosis

Extrensic obstructions

  • Goitre
  • Lymphoadenopathy
  • Post-op
  • Following neck surgery
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9
Q

What is bronchial breathing?

A
  • adventitious sound in resp
  • sounds hollow or bellowing
  • ins and exp phase are equal in length and intensity
  • signifies diseased of affected area has patent bronchus
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10
Q

What is a pleural (friction) rub?

A
  • Creaking, course or grating sound
  • Occurs at same moment of resp cycle insp and exp
    Due to friction between inflames visceral and parietal pleura from pulmonary infarction, pneumonia of vascultis
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11
Q

Explain absent or diminshed breath sounds?

A

Can be generalised or localised

Generalised = obesity, hyperinflation or hypoventilation
Localised = bronchial occlusion, pneumothorax, paralysis of diaphragm, pleural effusion
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12
Q

What are the different types of chest sounds?

A
  1. crackles
  2. wheezes
  3. stridor
  4. Bronchial breathing
  5. pleural rub or pleural crackles
  6. absent of diminished sounds
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13
Q

What is tactile fremitus?

A

An assessment of the patient.

  • Get them to say “99” over again
  • feel there chest for the vibration patterns

Basically vibrations from vocal chords during speech get transmitted down tracheobronchial tree and through alveoli to chest wall.

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14
Q

What does it suggest if there is increased fremitus?

A

Increased density of lung eg. Pneumonia, lung tumour or mass, atelectasis (alveolar collapse)

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15
Q

What does it suggest if there is decreased fremitus?

A

unilateral - bronchial obstruction due to mucous plug or FB, pneumothorax, pleural effusion

diffuse - COPD, muscular or obese chest wall

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16
Q

What is the Percussion technique?

A

place finger between intercostals and tap your finger listening for sounds

Evaluates lungs to depth of 5-7cm below chest wall

17
Q

What sounds occur with percussion

A

Low pitch sounds, louder = increased resonance

  • consolidation - oneumonia
  • Atelectasis
  • Pleural spaces filled with fluid

High pitch sounds - decreased resonance
- hyperinflation - asthma, copd, emphysemia, pneumothorax

18
Q

What should a focused respiratory assessment include?

A
  • Inspection
  • Palpation
  • Percussion
  • Auscultation